Litcius/Paper detail

Competitive Additive-Strategy Modulating Superaerophobic/Superhydrophilic Porous Copper for Enhanced Liquid Replenishment and Gas Evolution

Mengliang Hu, Weiqi Tang, Mou Xu, Lin Lin, Shu‐Shen Lyu, Dong-Chuan Mo

2025ACS Nano9 citationsDOI

Abstract

Enhancing mass transfer (liquid replenishment and gas escape) is critical for improving gas-evolution reactions (GERs) in energy conversion, yet a unified mass transfer enhancement mechanism for both chemical (e.g., hydrogen evolution reaction, HER) and physical (e.g., boiling heat transfer, BHT) remains elusive. This study employs a competitive electroreduction additive strategy to fabricate porous copper, simultaneously utilized in HER and BHT. By regulating hydrogen evolution and copper deposition, the method achieves precise pore-structure control and links microstructure, properties (wettability, superaerophobicity, etc.), and performance. In the electrocatalytic HER, compared to smooth copper, the aerophobic surface of Cu0.4H1.0 reduces the overpotential by 178 mV at 10 mA/cm 2, while the enhanced wettability kinetically facilitates the Volmer step, synergistically improving catalytic efficiency. In contrast, during BHT, the aerophobic property of Cu0.4H2.0 reduces wall superheat by 6.5 K (around 28 kW/m 2 ) and 14.6 K (around 1000 kW/m 2 ) compared to smooth copper, whereas the superior wettability under high heat flux conditions effectively mitigates heat transfer deterioration. This study not only provides insights into the synergistic application of porous copper materials in both chemical and physical gas-evolution reactions but also offers theoretical guidance and experimental evidence for the design and development of high-efficiency energy conversion materials.

Topics & Concepts

OverpotentialMaterials scienceWettingCopperMass transferChemical engineeringCatalysisPorosityHeat transferSuperheatingEnhanced heat transferOxygen evolutionBoilingEnergy transformationHydrogenChemical reactionNanotechnologyChemical energyThermal energyPorous mediumThermalHydrogen productionRefrigerantFlux (metallurgy)Surface energyChemical processHeat transfer enhancementElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionNanoporous metals and alloysNanomaterials for catalytic reactions